Haouari Olfa, Fardeau Marie-Laure, Cayol Jean-Luc, Fauque Guy, Casiot Corinne, Elbaz-Poulichet Françoise, Hamdi Moktar, Ollivier Bernard
Laboratoire de Microbiologie IRD, UMR D180, Microbiologie et Biotechnologie des Environnements Chauds, IFR-BAIM, ESIL, Case 925. Universités de Provence et de la Méditerranée, 163 Avenue de Luminy, F-13288 Marseille Cedex 09, France.
Syst Appl Microbiol. 2008 Mar;31(1):38-42. doi: 10.1016/j.syapm.2007.12.002. Epub 2008 Jan 24.
A new thermophilic sulphate-reducing bacterium (strain Hbr5T) was enriched and isolated from a terrestrial Tunisian hot spring. It was a non-spore-forming Gram-negative curved or vibrio-shaped bacterium. It appeared singly or in long chains and was actively motile by a polar flagellum. It possessed c-type cytochromes and desulfofuscidin. Growth occurred between 50 and 70 degrees C, with an optimum of 65 degrees C at pH 7.1. In the presence of sulphate as a terminal electron acceptor, this strain readily used H2 but formate only poorly. It could use sulphate, thiosulphate, sulphite or arsenate as electron acceptors. Its DNA G+C content was 36.1 mol%. Based on phenotypic, genomic, and phylogenetic characteristics, strain Hbr5T (=DSM 18151T, =JCM 13991T) is proposed to be assigned to a novel species of genus Thermodesulfovibrio, T. hydrogeniphilus sp. nov.